Van Lew v. Parr

19 S.C. Eq. 321
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 15, 1845
StatusPublished

This text of 19 S.C. Eq. 321 (Van Lew v. Parr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Lew v. Parr, 19 S.C. Eq. 321 (S.C. 1845).

Opinions

Curia, pet JohwstoN, Ch.

This cause has been extensively argued both in the Court of Appeals in Equity and in this Court, and has received that deliberate consideration which its importance demands ; and if, any doubts remain in the mind of the Court, they relate to points not necessarily affecting the result of the case. The duty has been assigned me of stating the conclusions ,to which a majority of my brethren, in this court of ultimate resort, have come: and 1 enter upon it with unfeigned diffidence, as well on account of the difficulty of the questions, as the shortness of the time allowed for discussing them in the judgment I am about to deliver.

There are three great questions involved in this appeal; — in the argument of which, counsel have accumulated cases to such a degree that if the court should undertake to notice them all specifically in its judgment, the task would be overwhelming and oppressive, and would effectually exclude the other causes before us from that share of our consideration to which they are justly entitled. All that can be expected, is, that we should carefully attend to principles deducible from the cases quoted- — - occasionally glancing at such of the cases, themselves, as seem to be most prominent in their respective classes, and to indicate most clearly the doctrine to be gathered from the current of decisions. And let it be remembered that it is not from anomalous cases ; — cases pressed to an extreme on the one side or the other j — -or led, by particular circumstances, out of the general range ; — that the leading doctrines of law are to be learned. It is the broad current which carries the acknowledged principle.

The questions for our consideration are : 1, Whether the title ■of David F. Myers, who conveyed to Van Lew, was a good title [332]*332in fee. 2, If not, then, whether its defects are such as, upon general principles of equity, entitle Yan Lew to a recision. 3, If, upon general principles, he is entitled to this relief; then whether he is entitled to the relief he seeks against Mrs. Parr.

These three questions will be taken up in their order.

1. Had David F. Myers a good title in fee ? In the opinion of a majority of my brethren the case will eventually turn on the two remaining questions, and, therefore, we do not deem it necessary to conclude any thing on this point; although we have been pressed by both parties to determine it. The plaintiff who has purchased a title, one of whose links is a decree of the Court of Equity, insists, that if that link is defective and the chain broken, the same court which, as he conceives, imposed the grievance upon him, is bound to relieve him from it. On the other hand the defendants contend that consistency requires at the hand of the court that it should uphold its own decree, and declare the title good.

But it is a plain misapprehension to suppose that the court is at all responsible for the effect or operation of its decree : or that it is at liberty, upon any consideration whatever, to pronounce it either more or less effectual in law than it really is. The question is as to the legal validity of the title : and every link in the chain is to be decided upon as a court of law would determine: and when the question arises in a case proper for equity cognizance, and is necessary to be decided in the case, her courts are bound by the plainest principles and the inexorable obligations of duty, — let the consequences be what they may, — to adjudicate it according to law and the truth.

There are members of this court who believe the title good : and, perhaps, may express that opinion : — and if they do, it will be found that their reasons and the authorities upon which they rely are very strong. Certainly they are sufficient to produce doubts in our minds, and to restrain us from coming to an opposite conclusion. But while it would afford us the utmost pleasure if we could unhesitatingly declare that the decree of 1835 carried the fee to the purchaser; — we do not see enough to satisfy us that such declaration would be found true when the contingent remaindermen under David Myers’ will come to put it to the test.

This is, a question which we do not intend to discuss, because we would not unnecessarily disparage a title which may possibly [333]*333be found good. But we may be permitted to offer a very few observations to justify the doubts we entertain : and to shew why we cannot relinquish them.

The general rule is undoubted, that a decree or judgment binds none but the parties before the court and their privies : and, of course, where property is sold under such adjudication, the purchaser acquires nothing beyond their interests. The parties before the court in this instance were the life tenants under the will; but the contingent remaindermen, (according to the averments in the bill,) were not in esse, and, of course, were not parties. There are cases in which parties not before the court, and even not in esse, may be bound by its judgment: but those are cases, it seems to us, where there is a privity of estate between the actual parties and those excluded from the records in virtue of which the former, — being clothed, for the present time, with the interests of the latter, — may be held to represent them; — as in estates tail, and the like. But, in the case before us, there was no privity of estate whatever, between the life tenants and remaindermen. The latter were to take nothing from the former by inheritance ; but were to derive all their interests in the property immediately from the testator as purchasers.

These observations might be extended, and other views of the subject might be taken; but, as I have said, it is not our intention to discuss the point under consideration.

But if we could overcome our doubts and pronounce the title good, that would terminate this cause, without relieving the plaintiff from the grievance of which he complains. We could not make such an adjudication without committing the identical fault which, in his apprehension, vitiates the decree of 1835. If the contingent remaindermen are concluded by that decree, then his title is good, and he has no need of the relief he seeks. But if they are not concluded by that decree, on the ground that they were not parties to the suit, the same objection would apply in this case and would deprive our decision of judicial authority. He would be left in the same condition as before. It is necessary to his case, therefore, that the title under which he holds should be defective and invalid. For the purpose, therefore, of considering the remaining questions in the case, it will be assumed that his vendor held under a defective title. And this brings us to the next question in the case ; which is—

2. Whether, upon a supposition that his title is invalid, the plaintiff has a general equity to be relieved of his bargain ?

[334]*334This is a case of conveyance with warranty actually executed and accepted, and possession taken and retained by the purchaser, who ever has been, and still is, in the undisturbed and unquestioned enjoyment of the property bought by him: and the question is whether he is entitled to a recision of his bargain on the ground of danger apprehended from the defects of his title.

This is the question for the more authoritative decision of which this cause was removed into this court. The court has formed a conclusive opinion upon it; in which, my former doubts being removed by the argument, — I am enabled to concur.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 S.C. Eq. 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-lew-v-parr-sc-1845.